Story

I was really excited of how well the result turned out, but for the last couple of weeks i felt that there has to be more about my mirror. So I came up with the idea that I need to display the contents of my favorite news, when the title tells me I need to read them. There was no way for me to create some buttons on the side of the mirror or what so ever, I personally dont like it and think they are ugly. Then I came up with the idea of speech recognition and decided to rewrite the whole UI for Windows IoT core. After 1 day of work I came up with this and it feels pretty neat.

Get it going!

What you need for the MagicMirror:

1x observation Mirror

1x Monitor of choice

1x RaspberryPI 2 or better running Windows IoT

Enough wood (that depends on your observation mirror size)

At least a little bit of wood working skills

The Monitor. I used a 24" IIyama Monitor, it is really important that the monitor got it's ports faceing downwards or to the sides not to the back (if sitting in front of it) this will keep the depth of the case to a minimum. Also the monitor should got good black level to get a nice mirror effect. You need to dissamble your monitor case to get the panel as near as possible to the mirror.

The Mirror. You need to get you a piece of observation mirror, in my case that seriously was the hardest part, you can't imagine what people asking you when you want to buy an observation mirror... After a bit of research I just ordered a piece of SGG MIRASTAR from my local glazier's workshop.

testing mirror with monitor in back

The wiring. My MagicMirror only got one power cord to supply both, monitor and pi, so all the wiring is stuffed in the back of the case. i just splitted the monitor power cord and attached a switching adapter to it.

wiring!

Building the case, i will not go deep in detail of how to build the case because it really depends on what monitor you use and what size your observation mirror has, but i can give you some useful hints. If you would like to know more detail you could read the article from Michael Teeuw linked above.

working on the case

You need to make sure that the depth of your case fit your monitor plus the mirror. Also give it some space on the sides like 2mm on each side. To keep monitor, mirror and pi in place i decided to install a toeboard border on top of my frame. It is installed with wood glue and small nails.

keep things in place helper ;-)

Images

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I just create a SpeechRecognizer with a list constraint and start a continuous recognition session.